Journalism in peril in the Central African Republic

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Yves Mbonzi Damanzi, a technician at the national radio station, poses for a picture in his office at the radio headquarters in Bangui, Central African Republic, November 28, 2013. The studio was looted for its computers and recording equipment during the March 2013 coup. PHOTO: REUTERS/Penney

By Francine Navarro
A landlocked state whose neighbours are steeped in political turmoil, the Central African Republic is mired by four decades of coups and civil unrest that have left the country in a protracted state of instability.
The country’s current humanitarian crisis, which stems from ongoing political tensions between sectarian militant groups, sheds light on how recurrent waves of political violence have created conditions that endanger both the lives and profession of journalists in one of the most underdeveloped nations in the world.

Background

The Central African Republic (C.A.R.) recently attracted considerable international attention as a result of a humanitarian crisis that developed from the March 2013 coup, when the Seleka, a coalition of rebel groups from the northern parts of the country, violently overthrew then-president François Bozizé. The coup stemmed from the coalition’s frustration with Bozizé’s failure to uphold a peace deal signed in January of that year. As Seleka members overtook the capital, Bangui, they committed countless atrocities–mass killings, arson, lootings, sexual violence, and the recruitment of child soldiers–which triggered violent reprisals from a rival, predominantly Christian collective of resistance fighters known as the “anti-balaka.”
Since the Seleka has a largely Muslim membership, the anti-balaka committed similarly heinous crimes against Muslim civilians thought to be allies of the coalition. Human Rights Watch reports that a number of villages in the northwest have even lost entire Muslim communities to forced displacement or murder at the hands of anti-balaka fighters. So far, the crisis has displaced an estimated one-quarter of the C.A.R.’s total population.
The Seleka coalition was disbanded in September 2013 and retreated to the north after ceding power in January 2014, when Catherine Samba-Panza was elected president. However, in a state where the justice system has reportedly ceased to function, neither side of the conflict has reigned in their attacks on civilians.
Against this backdrop of violence, impunity, and displacement, domestic journalism in the Central African Republic has been effectively paralyzed.
Watch the video below to learn more about the state of journalism in the C.A.R.